Collecting the Relics of a Martyred President
The American people, ever prompt to recognize with a depth
of sentiment and enthusiasm the generous impulses and beneficent
acts of their great public men, are today preparing for the
erection of a great National Memorial at Niles, Ohio, where
the great Martyr-President William McKinley was born. The motives
which underlie this great movement, the chief considerations
presented by the history of the man, and the acts and progress
thus far accomplished are here tersely outlined.
THE glow of American youth and hope is reflected in the fact that
we celebrate the birthdays of our famous men, rather than the date
of their death, as in the Latin countries. Birthdays reveal the
optimistic American view of a birthright looking fearlessly to the
future, and adding to the tender reverence associated with the passing
of a great life career the idea that this life represents from the
beginning. The first thing that comes to mind in celebrating a birthday
is the birthplace. The scenes and environment whereby character
is formed in youth play an important part in the career of public
men. Abraham Lincoln was never wholly uprooted from the rugged and
sturdy pioneer life associated with his humble birth.
The eyes of the nation are now turned
toward the humble birthplace of another great martyr President,
and in the great state of Ohio no spot is held in more affectionate
remembrance than the little town of Niles, where William McKinley
was born. Here today through the activities of his life-long friends
and companions, plans are under way for the erection of a McKinley
Birthplace Memorial Building, which will be an appropriate monument
to the memory of the late President.
This birthplace memorial was provided
for by an act of Congress signed by President Taft, March 4, 1909,
and was the first act that he ever signed as President. An association
was formed to carry out the work, and as president, Col. Joseph
G. Butler of Youngstown, the boyhood friend and companion of William
McKinley, was chosen to take active charge. The work of collecting
funds was undertaken by him and the other trustees of the association,
which includes a notable group of statesmen. Hon. John G. Milburn,
at whose home in Buffalo William McKinley died, and a close personal
friend; Hon. John G. Schmidelapp of Cincinnati, another intimate
friend and distinguished Ohio citizen; Hon. Myron T. Herrick, Ambassador
to France, whose name is associated intimately with the career of
McKinley, and Hon. W. A. Thomas of Niles, Ohio, president of the
Briar [sic] Hill Steel Company, and an old-time associate
of the late President, make up the list of directors. The work has
been with them a labor of love and devotion, and they have worked
faithfully for the erection of a memorial that will recall the life
and time of William McKinley to future generations.
The memorial building as planned will
be valued at more than $200,000, and will stand in a beautiful park
donated by the town of Niles, valued at $50,000 additional. Nothing
has been spared to make this building a fitting memorial. The personal
relics associated with the career of McKinley from the cradle to
the grave, will be here assembled. There will be a library, a relic
room, an auditorium for the people, and the headquarters for the
Grand Army of the Republic, and Spanish War veterans [219][220]
—in fact, everything in any way associated with the memory of William
McKinley will not only be preserved here but will be utilized as
he would have wished.
Already $100,000 has been raised by
personal subscription of the trustees and friends toward the completion
of the memorial. Now it is proposed to raise the other $100,000
by popular subscription of a dollar each. Everyone is invited to
subscribe, and a handsome autographed book by Colonel Butler, describing
the work of the memorial, will be presented to everyone sending
a dollar subscription for the popular movement. This book contains
one of the finest portraits ever made of William McKinley, so excellent
indeed, that Justice McKenna of the Supreme Court, many years a
close friend of President McKinley, pronounced it the best he had
ever seen and took it from the book and framed it for his library.
The book also contains a facsimile of the act of Congress authorizing
and commending the construction of the Birthplace Memorial. It is
hoped that of the six million [220][221]
people who voted for William McKinley as President, and of the millions
of others who admired and respected him, the individual subscriptions
will soon be contributed.
It is early yet to estimate the value
of William McKinley’s life and its effect upon American history.
Even now, however, great statesmen and world historians have agreed
that the McKinley administration marked a most important epoch in
American statesmanship, in its far-reaching influence upon the future
of all nations. It was William McKinley who, though himself from
the North, yet won the love of the South and knit the nation closer
together. His administration brought prosperity. The factory chimneys
aglow all over the country are in themselves inanimate monuments
to the memory of McKinley. The wage envelopes and increased income
of almost every American date from the time of William McKinley’s
service in the White House.
In the triumph of a nation celebrating
the completion of the Panama Canal—a dream unfulfilled for centuries—it
is [221][222] fitting that a grateful
people should pay their tribute of respect in preserving the birthplace
of the President whose personal and executive act led to the actual
undertaking of this great project. A nation spending half a billion
dollars on this undertaking will surely see to it that the birthplace
of the man so intimately and officially associated with the work,
is honored in connection with the birth of the great canal-project.
The Republic of Cuba is another monument
to the life of William McKinley. For the first time in history,
a great nation won for a struggling young country its liberty and
independence and carried out its pledge to give to an alien people
absolute freedom and independence. Throughout his entire administration
William McKinley executed and created policies indissolubly associated
with the era of peace and good will, which has now become a fixed
policy of the United States of America. Thus it seems fitting that
President Mario G. Menacol, of Cuba, and many other distinguished
sons of the new republic, should send generous contributions and
greetings to the memorial commemorating the birthplace of William
McKinley.
HIS life though brief was great in achievement. William McKinley,
the soldier boy in the Civil War, lived to see the flag of his country
defended by the sons of Confederates, who marched and fought side
by side with Union veterans, carrying forward a campaign under one
flag and consummating the dream of Lincoln for an eternal bond of
unity which time or eternity can never unloose. William McKinley’s
career characterized the movement that led later to the establishment
of a republic in China, and the liberation of hundreds of millions
in the Orient from the bondage of ancient customs, a triumph of
the real missionary spirit, fruitful in results, and never wavering
or miscalculating in carrying forward the message of Galilee in
the kindness and gentleness that conquers more effectively than
brute force of arms. His last words, “God’s will not mine be done,”
are an inspiration to humankind, reflecting the Christ-like spirit
of the kindly, just and noble personality that made the world better
for his having lived. His name will be ever associated with Lincoln
as a kindred spirit.
In reviewing the private life of American
statesmen, one cannot conceive of a more perfect example in history
as a father, husband, friend, comrade, or even President. Time,
efforts or money were never spared in his endeavor to help others.
Such a life cannot be too forcefully impressed upon the young people
of America, and every individual who contributes his dollar toward
the memorial for William McKinley’s birthplace, gains manifold in
the very influence of the act itself. In the beautiful Mahoning
Valley, the birthplace of William McKinley will be commemorated
with a building where the wayfarer can survey this splendid memorial
and the relics and scenes associated with the life of McKinley,
and go forth refreshed and inspired with the spirit of the kindly
and generous President, whose public and private life will ever
remain an imperishable inspiration to Christian civilization the
world over. On ten dollar national bank notes appears the likeness
of William McKinley, and that would seem to be the most appropriate
contribution for those who can afford it, but the dollar contributions
from the “plain people,” as Lincoln loved to call us, will perhaps
as appropriately commemorate the democratic spirit of the man. It
is planned to have the building completed as soon as possible, and
every person who reads these lines ought not to delay in securing
a two-cent stamp and an envelope, and placing therein a one dollar
bill and name and address, to be mailed to Col. J. G. Butler, Jr.,
at Youngstown, Ohio. In reply every contributor will receive a copy
of the book containing the portraits and plans, autographed by the
author and president of the board of directors of the National McKinley
Birthplace Association. The book will provide a souvenir associated
with the inspiring life and ideals of William McKinley, whose life
and memory have brought nearer to God and His righteousness the
world in which we live.
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